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BEND IT LIKE PATELCentring Race, Ethnicity and Gender in Feminist Analysis of Womens Football in EnglandLeeds Metropolitan University, UK
University of Brighton, UK, j.c.caudwell{at}brighton.ac.uk
Leeds Metropolitan University, UK This article focuses on the experiences of Black women and one Indian Hindu woman in football in England. The discussions draw on survey and interview research to theorize gender, race and ethnicity. The research represents a questionnaire survey of womens teams and 14 semi-structured in-depth interviews; seven with players and seven with officials. The survey provides data on players, coaches and managers at womens football clubs registered with the Football Association (FA) in the North of England. The questionnaire data on race, ethnicity and gender demonstrate that footballs organizational structures in the region are White and gendered. The interview data highlights the gendered and racialized experiences of women as they begin to play and continue to play football at the club level. What emerges from the interviews is how racial difference is constituted for some women footballers. The article analyses the processes that construct gender and race as interlocking systems of relationships by using Glenns (1999) theoretical framework identifying three processes through which race and gender are mutually constituted: representation, micro-interaction and social structure. We raise both theoretical and methodological issues that indicate the need for further rigorous theorizing in the sociology of sport of womens interwoven experiences of gender, race and ethnicity.
Key Words: football gender/race/ethnicity women
International Review for the Sociology of Sport, Vol. 40, No. 1,
71-88 (2005) This article has been cited by other articles:
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